"Not at all," the former US president told a conservative radio host. "There's nothing in the constitution to say that it could [force him to quit the race]. Not at all. And even the radical left crazies are saying that wouldn't stop [me], and it wouldn't stop me either."
Nevertheless, a former Trump White House lawyer said yesterday the evidence against him over his handling of classified documents was now "overwhelming" and would "last an antiquity", after new charges were filed in the case on Thursday.
"I think this original indictment was engineered to last a thousand years and now this superseding indictment will last an antiquity," Ty Cobb told CNN. "This is such a tight case, the evidence is so overwhelming." In June, the special counsel Jack Smith indicted Trump on 37 counts regarding his handling of classified records after leaving the White House. On Thursday, in a superseding indictment filed in a Florida court, four more charges were outlined. A second Trump staffer, the Mar-aLago maintenance worker Carlos De Oliveira, was charged, alongside Walt Nauta, Trump's valet, who has previously pleaded not guilty.
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